Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are a glorified plumber or landscaper with more education. They provide an hourly service for the rich.
I’m a lawyer and I think I’d rather my kid decide to be a plumber lol
Anonymous wrote:LOL. Funny how people's view of their world crumbles when they realize that they are wage slaves.

Anonymous wrote:Yup, these are the working class, and rarely among the rich.
Anonymous wrote:Yup, these are the working class, and rarely among the rich.
Anonymous wrote:They are a glorified plumber or landscaper with more education. They provide an hourly service for the rich.
Anonymous wrote:They are a glorified plumber or landscaper with more education. They provide an hourly service for the rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one requirement for being wealthy is to have the option to not work. Not sure if you are wealthy, no matter how much you have, without this option.
Many, many DC homeowners could sell their home $1.5M home, move somewhere a few hours away & never work again.
I doubt that people who have a lifestyle that includes a $1.5m home will be able to live for life on the proceeds of their home. Will they move to a lower COL location and suddenly live on puppy chow?
And that cheap home they would buy would be a shack in the boonies. I don’t think pp has actually looked at real estate in what used to be low cost areas post Covid. We bought a house in a lower COL area in 2017 and it has appreciated by about 250%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The DC area is primarily just upper middle class. The real money is in and around NYC, Dallas, Miami and San Francisco.
Thrown in Jackson Hole, Park City, Bozeman, Aspen & Telluride which gained a ton of year-round residents post-COVID. Tons of wealth in Austin Hill Country too.
I agree with this statement. I live in one of those cities and the wealth discussion and gripes about “unaffordable” Bethesda homes seem so provincial to me. A $2-3M house would basically be a ranch house, albeit renovated, where I live. You’d be one of the “poors” in the private school circle with that kind of house.
Anyway, despite all the complaining here, DC lawyers have a good lifestyle and seem to be respected enough there. They don’t know how good they have it.
Anonymous wrote:To the PP saying that partners are out golfing all day and doing 90% networking, that’s not remotely the case at any of the firms I’ve worked at.